joe1776
Well-Known Member
On its own, logic is amoral. It can be used to create or destroy and for moral or immoral purposes.what else is moral if not logic?
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On its own, logic is amoral. It can be used to create or destroy and for moral or immoral purposes.what else is moral if not logic?
try and answer me those questions without factoring in laws:
is it wrong to kill someone that tries to kill you and you cant stop him otherwise?
is it wrong to kill someone that tries to kill a child near you and you cant stop him otherwise?
is it wrong to kill someone that tries to kill a stranger and you cant stop him otherwise?
is it wrong to kill someone that tries to kill a dog near you and you cant stop him otherwise?
is it wrong to kill someone that tries to steal your wallet?
is it wrong to kill someone that cursed you?
True.Murder is an unlawful premeditated killing. If a country didn't have any laws against premeditated killings they wouldn't be murders.
I'm asking you to be logical, analytic, to link the definition of murder to one of wrongness. In a was that shows every murder, every possible case, is always wrong. YOu may argue "all harm to humans is bad" and "all bad things are wrong" for instance.if murder wasn't wrong, it would't have been considered murder.
I can't really understand what it is you want me to prove?
Are you asking me to prove that it is "objectively" wrong? i can't! because it is not
I can't really think of anything that is "objectively" wrong. unfortunately it is all based on what HUMANS decide to be wrong.
try and answer me those questions without factoring in laws:
is it wrong to kill someone that tries to kill you and you cant stop him otherwise?
is it wrong to kill someone that tries to kill a child near you and you cant stop him otherwise?
is it wrong to kill someone that tries to kill a stranger and you cant stop him otherwise?
is it wrong to kill someone that tries to kill a dog near you and you cant stop him otherwise?
is it wrong to kill someone that tries to steal your wallet?
is it wrong to kill someone that cursed you?
can you imagine, once upon a time, it wasn't considered wrong in ANY of the statements???
as the years passed by, the latter became obvious to people that are wrong.
we make laws when we understand that something is wrong. not the other way around.
we do however, use laws to try and prevent people from using their own "moral code" (gladly).Ok, I am not actually trying to promote murder in any way, but would you say that every law is good?
Premise? what premise?
It might happen in countries that are driven by flawed logic like north Korea.
In the logic going from "murder" to "wrong" you have to have an argument, of sorts. If flawed definitons off murder are possible, are they still cases of "murder" - legally yes, within the context of the legal system of that nation. So if "bad" defintions of murder can happen, what then?
I'm asking you to be logical, analytic, to link the definition of murder to one of wrongness. In a was that shows every murder, every possible case, is always wrong. YOu may argue "all harm to humans is bad" and "all bad things are wrong" for instance.if murder wasn't wrong, it would't have been considered murder.
I can't really understand what it is you want me to prove?
Are you asking me to prove that it is "objectively" wrong? i can't! because it is not
I can't really think of anything that is "objectively" wrong. unfortunately it is all based on what HUMANS decide to be wrong.
try and answer me those questions without factoring in laws:
is it wrong to kill someone that tries to kill you and you cant stop him otherwise?
is it wrong to kill someone that tries to kill a child near you and you cant stop him otherwise?
is it wrong to kill someone that tries to kill a stranger and you cant stop him otherwise?
is it wrong to kill someone that tries to kill a dog near you and you cant stop him otherwise?
is it wrong to kill someone that tries to steal your wallet?
is it wrong to kill someone that cursed you?
can you imagine, once upon a time, it wasn't considered wrong in ANY of the statements???
as the years passed by, the latter became obvious to people that are wrong.
we make laws when we understand that something is wrong. not the other way around.
we do however, use laws to try and prevent people from using their own "moral code" (gladly).Ok, I am not actually trying to promote murder in any way, but would you say that every law is good?
Premise? what premise?
It might happen in countries that are driven by flawed logic like north Korea.
In the logic going from "murder" to "wrong" you have to have an argument, of sorts.
I'm asking you to be logical, analytic, to link the definition of murder to one of wrongness. In a way that shows every murder, every possible case, is always wrong. You may argue "all harm to humans is bad" and "all bad things are wrong" for instance.if murder wasn't wrong, it would't have been considered murder.
I can't really understand what it is you want me to prove?
Are you asking me to prove that it is "objectively" wrong? i can't! because it is not
I can't really think of anything that is "objectively" wrong. unfortunately it is all based on what HUMANS decide to be wrong.
Ok, I am not actually trying to promote murder in any way, but would you say that every law is good?try and answer me those questions without factoring in laws:
is it wrong to kill someone that tries to kill you and you cant stop him otherwise?
is it wrong to kill someone that tries to kill a child near you and you cant stop him otherwise?
is it wrong to kill someone that tries to kill a stranger and you cant stop him otherwise?
is it wrong to kill someone that tries to kill a dog near you and you cant stop him otherwise?
is it wrong to kill someone that tries to steal your wallet?
is it wrong to kill someone that cursed you?
can you imagine, once upon a time, it wasn't considered wrong in ANY of the statements???
as the years passed by, the latter became obvious to people that are wrong.
we make laws when we understand that something is wrong. not the other way around.
we do however, use laws to try and prevent people from using their own "moral code" (gladly).
In the logic going from "murder" to "wrong" you have to have an argument, of sorts. If a NK definition of murder is a bad or morally flawed one, does that make murder (in the context f that, flawed, legal definition) less evil? For it is still an act of murder to that societies judiciary.Premise? what premise?
It might happen in countries that are driven by flawed logic like north Korea.
In this context, an unbiased mind is one that is not personally involved with, and holds no significant and relevant bias toward, a moral judgement in the case at hand.Whats an unbiased mind? The very nature of sentience is bias - it gets a job done. The concept of an unbiased mind is like an unbiased hand, or any other adaptation - null and void. The only things without bias are rocks and stones.
Yeah, I meant it in the sense of what is moral if not based on logic.On its own, logic is amoral. It can be used to create or destroy and for moral or immoral purposes.
intuitive is lacking information. it will be based on what i know, but that is far then being unbiased. it will be biased to my own beliefs.Laws aren't necessary. Each of those cases can be decided by the intuitive judgments of unbiased minds. You can do it and so can I. In fact the laws that pertain to them were written by men who learned from the very same judgments of conscience that you and I have.
I'm asking you to be logical, analytic, to link the definition of murder to one of wrongness. In a was that shows every murder, every possible case, is always wrong. YOu may argue "all harm to humans is bad" and "all bad things are wrong" for instance.
of course not. but the one that prevents people from killing others for no valid reason, is.IOk, I am not actually trying to promote murder in any way, but would you say that every law is good?
I think i understand what you are asking.In the logic going from "murder" to "wrong" you have to have an argument, of sorts.
Yet the fact is that alien race did not decide on our laws. they are the outcome of our advancement as a society.What about alien races, they may want to hunt humans for sport, but impose a "inhumane" legal system on us...making fatal self defence an act of murder. So its LP (logically possible) to have murder laws which are evil, and ought to be violated. Not in the everyday world we live in, but in thought experiments.
I predict that a murder trial in the future will look something like this: A professional, expert panel of highly intelligent members, trained in the forensic sciences, will gather the facts of the case and analyze them.. Their reasoning faculties will be concerned with:intuitive is lacking information. it will be based on what i know, but that is far then being unbiased. it will be biased to my own beliefs.
as people beliefs are subjective, laws are formed to prevent such intuitive judgement.
Can you imagine if the court of law was based on intuition???
You are in a room with another man secured firmly to separate chairs on opposite sides of the room. Your family and his are locked in rooms watching you. You have 2 buttons 1 kills you and lets everyone else free, 1 kills hims and lets everybody else free. If you do nothing at the end of one hour everyone dies. Choose logically.
I would narrow it down to : What exactly happen?I predict that a murder trial in the future will look something like this: A professional, expert panel of highly intelligent members, trained in the forensic sciences, will gather the facts of the case and analyze them.. Their reasoning faculties will be concerned with:
What exactly happened?
Who did it?
What was their intent?
I thought we just agreed it will be based on knowledge about the case.The question, "Was this act immoral?" will be an intuitive judgment of their collective conscience.
I would hope soIf the act was not immoral, they will not punish it, of course.
What do you mean? you say that no one will care if murderers will walk freely in the streets?There will be no law involved because society will not care what men who had no knowledge of the facts in the specific case at hand thought about it.
Unless we can actually try and rehabilitate criminal and do some statistics how long it takes for a criminal of different levels to actually be recovered.If the act was immoral, and the defendant did it, the question of "What's a fair punishment in this case?" would be another question of conscience and its intuitive judgment.
Oh. now i understood what you've meant aboveAn average of the panel members' recommendations will be fair. Once again, no laws on sentencing guidelines will interfere because the opinions of people who don't have knowledge of the case will have no value.
Intent is a key element in every moral case. If we intentionally cause harm, it's immoral. If we accidentally cause harm, it's not. Traffic accidents are caused by negligence but are not criminal cases for this reason. In mercy killings the intent is to end suffering, not to cause harm, therefore not immoral. If the intent is to defend oneself or to protect innocent others the act is not immoral.As for the what was their intent, will probably be irrelevant.
My fault. I didn't make clear that those three questions of reason would have to be completely answered before our intuitive judgment would kick in.I thought we just agreed it will be based on knowledge about the case.
No. I'm talking about the legislators who wrote the laws on murder. Since they wrote those laws knowing nothing about the facts of the case at trial, the future public will not care about having their opinions. Therefore laws will be abandoned.What do you mean? you say that no one will care if murderers will walk freely in the streets?
Agreed.There are many things that are possible if we invest more time in understanding the human mind and the way we function.
What about a case that i harm someone because I truly believe its for his benefit?Intent is a key element in every moral case. If we intentionally cause harm, it's immoral. If we accidentally cause harm, it's not. Traffic accidents are caused by negligence but are not criminal cases for this reason. In mercy killings the intent is to end suffering, not to cause harm, therefore not immoral. If the intent is to defend oneself or to protect innocent others the act is not immoral.
Oh. ok. so we agree on that. only it is not intuitive if you know everything that happened.My fault. I didn't make clear that those three questions of reason would have to be completely answered before our intuitive judgment would kick in.
I don't think it will be so. maybe law enforcement will be less enforced, but the laws will surely remain.No. I'm talking about the legislators who wrote the laws on murder. Since they wrote those laws knowing nothing about the facts of the case at trial, the future public will not care about having their opinions. Therefore laws will be abandoned.
cheersAgreed.
Getting the facts straight would be a function of the reasoning minds of the jurors. The jurors aren't just going to take the perpetrator's word that he meant no harm. But a clear case of euthanasia is not immoral because the intent is to end suffering not to harm. The states that make it illegal are committing an immoral act by making criminals of people who act morally.What about a case that i harm someone because I truly believe its for his benefit? In my eyes its a very moral thing. yet it will probably be immoral in the eyes of society if the benefit was, for example, to be released of a demon possessing your soul or something like that.
The texting explains the cause but it still wasn't an intentional act.another question can be in regards to accidents, what if a driver runs over a man who jumped to the road.lets assume it is obvious he had no intent in killing this man but what if you will find out that he had just texted someone when hit that man.
It doesn't matter. The driver did not commit an intentional act. That's all that matters.what if you knew for a fact that if he avoided texting, the man's death was very very likely to be prevented. your moral judgement of the event will be different even more.
That's not my take on it.. In my thinking, you need to think of the intuitive function of your brain and the reasoning function of your brain as being assigned separate tasks: The reasoning function is assigned to get the facts straight, to collect and analyze them. The intuitive function than makes a judgment.Oh. ok. so we agree on that. only it is not intuitive if you know everything that happened.
the more information you have, the less intuitive it becomes.
I thiGetting the facts straight would be a function of the reasoning minds of the jurors. The jurors aren't just going to take the perpetrator's word that he meant no harm. But a clear case of euthanasia is not immoral because the intent is to end suffering not to harm. The states that make it illegal are committing an immoral act by making criminals of people who act morally.
The jurors are not likely to see the demon excuse as a lack of intent, thus justifiable, but they might option for insanity and put the killer in an asylum.
The texting explains the cause but it still wasn't an intentional act.
It doesn't matter. The driver did not commit an intentional act. That's all that matters.
That's not my take on it.. In my thinking, you need to think of the intuitive function of your brain and the reasoning function of your brain as being assigned separate tasks: The reasoning function is assigned to get the facts straight, to collect and analyze them. The intuitive function than makes a judgment.
Can you please define intuition in your pov? because I suspect we see intuition as different things.Getting the facts straight would be a function of the reasoning minds of the jurors. The jurors aren't just going to take the perpetrator's word that he meant no harm. But a clear case of euthanasia is not immoral because the intent is to end suffering not to harm. The states that make it illegal are committing an immoral act by making criminals of people who act morally.
The jurors are not likely to see the demon excuse as a lack of intent, thus justifiable, but they might option for insanity and put the killer in an asylum.
The texting explains the cause but it still wasn't an intentional act.
It doesn't matter. The driver did not commit an intentional act. That's all that matters.
That's not my take on it.. In my thinking, you need to think of the intuitive function of your brain and the reasoning function of your brain as being assigned separate tasks: The reasoning function is assigned to get the facts straight, to collect and analyze them. The intuitive function than makes a judgment.